Death row inmates now executed with drug cocktail used to euthanize animals

Facing a shortage of supplies for lethal injections, US law enforcement officials have begun executing prisoners with an animal anesthetic that has not been approved at the federal level, with the first such execution coming this week.

European pharmacies, citing a moral issue with capital
punishment, have stopped sending certain drugs to regions of the
US that still carry out the death penalty, areas that include
Ohio, Missouri, Texas, Georgia, Florida, and Arizona.

States are still using pentobarbital, intended to euthanize
animals, while local supplies last but those without that option
have begun “making changes in their lethal injection
process,” Richard Dieter, director of the Death Penalty
Information Center, told Agence France Presse.

Missouri had planned to use propofol - the common anesthetic that
killed pop star Michael Jackson - for an October execution, but
concerns about access to the drug via its German manufacturer
Fresenius Kabi led to a reconsideration by state Gov. Jay Nixon
on Friday.

"This is a decision that will be welcomed by the medical
community and patients nationwide who were deeply concerned about
the potential of a drug shortage," John Ducker, CEO of Fresenius
Kabi USA, told the Associated Press.

Propofol is used about 50 million times annually in the US,
according to the company.

“This is a continuing theme: every time a state starts to use
a new drug, the company that makes that drug stops selling
it,” said Deborah Denno, a law professor at Fordham
University and expert on the subject.

Compounding pharmacies, which create specialized pharmaceutical
product meant to fit the needs of a patient, have begun producing
the drugs for state authorities.

But because of the lack of transparency around the production
process – one compounding pharmacy was responsible for a fatal
meningitis outbreak in 2012 because of poor hygiene – prisoners
argue that risky drug cocktails put them at risk of being
subjected to “cruel and unusual punishment,” which is
prohibited under the US Constitution.

Earlier this month three Texas-based death row prisoners filed a
lawsuit arguing this type of pharmacy is "not subject to
stringent FDA regulations" and is "one of the leading
sources for counterfeit drugs entering the US," the lawsuit
reads, as quoted by AFP.

"There is a significant chance that [the pentobarbital] could
be contaminated, creating a grave likelihood that the lethal
injection process could be extremely painful, or harm or handicap
plaintiffs without actually killing them," it adds.

“Nobody really knows the quality of the drugs, because of the
lack of oversight,” Denno told AFP.

Michael Yowell, who was convicted of murdering his parents 15
years ago, was executed in Texas Wednesday. He became the first
inmate to be executed in Texas with pentobarbital since European
nations halted production for this purpose. His lawyers
unsuccessfully tried to stop him from being killed, saying the
compounded factors in pentobarbital make the drug unpredictable
and there have not been enough trials to guarantee the death is
painless.

The states in question may find an applicable replacement for the
short-term but, Denno argued, this development could be an
indication that capital punishment is on the wane.

“How many times in this country can they change the way they
execute?” she said. “There were more changes in lethal
injections in the last 5 years than in the 25 preceding
years.”